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China's New Loans Just Shrank For The First Time Since July 2025

Published May 15, 2026
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Summary:
  • New bank loans in China shrank by 10 billion yuan in April, the first monthly contraction since July 2025.
  • Analysts had expected new loans of about 300 billion yuan, so the miss was big.
  • Outstanding yuan loans grew 5.6% from a year earlier, the slowest pace in months.

China's economy looked solid this year on the back of exports, but the lending data tells a different story.

In April, Chinese banks made fewer new loans than they wrote off - a net contraction of 10 billion yuan, or roughly $1.47 billion. Analysts had been looking for about 300 billion yuan in new lending.

It is the first monthly contraction since July of last year, and it shows households and businesses are not borrowing.

A Big Drop From March

The miss looks even bigger next to March, when Chinese banks issued nearly 3 trillion yuan in new loans. That kind of seasonal push usually carries momentum into April.

This year, the engine stalled. Total new loans through the first four months of 2026 came in at 8.59 trillion yuan, down from 10.06 trillion yuan in the same stretch a year earlier.

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The Broader Credit Picture Is Slowing Too

Outstanding yuan loans grew 5.6% from a year earlier in April, slower than 5.7% in March. Total social financing - a wider measure that includes corporate bonds and shadow lending - also slowed, growing 7.8% versus 7.9% a month earlier.

Neither number moves much on its own. Together, they point in the same direction: credit demand inside China is fading.

That matters because exports can't carry the whole economy, and Beijing's growth model needs domestic spending and borrowing to do their share.

Why The Iran War Is In The Background

China's Q1 GDP beat expectations on strong exports, but then the Iran war ramped up energy costs and hit global trade routes. That weakened the global demand picture that was carrying Beijing's numbers.

April's lending miss is what that looks like at the bank level, with companies seeing softer demand and putting borrowing on hold.

What To Watch:

The People's Bank of China has been holding off on big rate moves all year, and April's data gives it a reason to reconsider - or to push fiscal stimulus harder.

Either way, China's policy response over the next few weeks will set the tone for emerging markets and global commodities. Every producer counting on a Chinese demand rebound will be watching.

For a daily breakdown of how data like this hits global markets, join the 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - the free 45-minute investing masterclass comes with the signup.

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